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Bipartisan pressure mounts on Pentagon to release second strikes footage

Congress released a $900 billion defense bill that reshapes U.S. economic and military competition with China by imposing new investment restrictions, banning a range of Chinese-made technologies from Pentagon supply chains, and expanding diplomatic and intelligence efforts to track Beijing’s global footprint. 

The legislation, which authorizes War Department spending at $8 billion above the White House’s request, includes a 4% pay raise for enlisted service members, expands counter-drone authorities, and directs new investments in the Golden Dome missile defense shield and nuclear modernization programs. 

It also extends Pentagon support to law enforcement operations at the southwest border and strengthens U.S. posture in the Indo-Pacific, including funding for Taiwan’s security cooperation program.

In a victory for conservative privacy hawks like House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, the legislation includes a non-defense provision that would mandate FBI disclosure when the bureau was investigating presidential candidates and other candidates for federal office.

That measure was the subject of party in-fighting last week when Rep. Elise Stefanik, R-N.Y., whom Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., had appointed chairwoman of House GOP leadership, publicly accused the speaker of kowtowing to Democrats and allowing that provision to be removed.

Johnson said he was blindsided by Stefanik’s anger and was unaware of her concerns when she had made them public.

Stefanik later claimed victory on X, stating the provision had been reinstated after a conversation between herself, Johnson and President Donald Trump. 

Coverage of in vitro fertilization (IVF) for military families, which became a flashpoint in recent days, is not included in the final NDAA. Neither are provisions preempting states from regulating AI or banning a U.S. central bank digital currency (CBDC). 

Republicans have pushed the CBDC prohibition as a privacy and civil-liberties measure, arguing that a government-issued digital dollar could give federal agencies the ability to monitor or restrict individual transactions. 

House aides said the anti-CBDC language became tied to a separate housing-policy package known as ‘Road to Housing,’ and the concessions required to keep both items together were unacceptable.

The bill also establishes a new ‘Artificial Intelligence Futures Steering Committee’ charged with producing long-range forecasts and policy recommendations for advanced AI systems, including artificial general intelligence.

The legislation takes aim at long-standing bottlenecks in the defense industrial base by authorizing new investment tools, expanding multi-year procurement for high-demand munitions and platforms, and overhauling portions of the acquisition system to speed the fielding of commercial and emerging technologies. 

Alongside those reforms, lawmakers approved new ‘right-to-repair’ style requirements that force contractors to provide the technical data the Pentagon needs to maintain and sustain major weapons systems—a change intended to reduce vendor lock-in and ease chronic maintenance delays across the fleet.

One major section of the bill establishes a far-reaching outbound investment screening system, requiring U.S. companies and investors to alert the Treasury Department when they back certain high-risk technologies in China or other ‘countries of concern.’ The measure gives Treasury the ability to block deals outright, forces detailed annual reporting to Congress, and grants new authorities to sanction foreign firms tied to China’s military or surveillance networks. Lawmakers cast the effort as a long-overdue step to keep U.S. capital from fueling Beijing’s development of dual-use technologies.

The bill also includes a procurement ban targeting biotechnology providers that would bar the Pentagon from contracting with Chinese genetic sequencing and biotech firms linked to the People’s Liberation Army or China’s security services. 

Additional sourcing prohibitions restrict the War Department from purchasing items such as advanced batteries, photovoltaic components, computer displays, and critical minerals originating from foreign entities of concern, further tightening U.S. supply chains away from China. They also require the department to phase out the use of Chinese-made computers, printers and other tech equipment.

Beyond economic measures, the NDAA directs the State Department to deploy a new cadre of Regional China Officers at U.S. diplomatic posts around the world, responsible for monitoring Chinese commercial, technological, and infrastructure activities across every major geographic region, including Beijing’s Belt and Road Initiative.

The NDAA contains several Israel-related provisions, including a directive for the Pentagon to avoid participating in international defense exhibitions that bar Israeli involvement. It authorizes funding for  Iron Dome, David’s Sling, and Arrow – the missile defense programs the U.S. operates with Isra

The bill also requires biennial reports comparing China’s global diplomatic presence to that of the United States. The Pentagon is separately directed to strengthen U.S. posture in the Indo-Pacific by extending the Pacific Deterrence Initiative and expanding cooperative training and industrial-base initiatives with regional allies, including Taiwan and the Philippines.

The legislation reauthorizes the Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative at $400 million per year for fiscal years 2026 and 2027. Congress will also require more frequent reporting on allied contributions to Ukraine to track how European partners support Kyiv.

The bill repeals two long-dormant war authorizations tied to earlier phases of U.S. military involvement in Iraq, while leaving the primary post-9/11 counterterrorism authority untouched. Lawmakers said the final text includes repeals of the 1991 Gulf War AUMF and the 2002 Iraq War AUMF, both of which successive administrations have said are no longer operationally necessary. The 1991 authorization approved the U.S.-led effort to expel Iraqi forces from Kuwait, and the 2002 authority permitted the invasion of Iraq under President George W. Bush.

Both parties have debated winding down these authorizations for years, arguing they no longer reflect current U.S. missions in the Middle East. Presidents from both parties, including Trump, have maintained that modern military operations in the region do not rely on either statute and that the commander in chief already holds sufficient Article II authority to defend U.S. personnel when required. Repeal also answers long-running concerns in Congress about outdated war authorities being used as secondary legal justifications for actions far from their original intent, such as the 2020 strike on Iranian Gen. Qassem Soleimani.

The NDAA does not touch the 2001 Authorization for Use of Military Force, which remains the central legal basis for U.S. counter-terror operations against al-Qaeda, ISIS, and associated groups. That post-9/11 statute continues to underpin nearly all active U.S. counter-terror missions worldwide.

House aides said leaders in their chamber hoped to consider the bill as soon as this week. It will first need to go through the House Rules Committee, the final gatekeepers before legislation gets a chamber-wide vote. It could hit that panel as early as Tuesday afternoon.

Then it will head for a vote in the Senate before reaching Trump’s desk for his signature.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

  • The Baltimore Ravens lost to the Pittsburgh Steelers 27-22, dropping them a game out of first place in the AFC North.
  • A controversial replay review overturned a potential go-ahead touchdown catch by Ravens tight end Isaiah Likely.
  • Baltimore had several missed opportunities, including a dropped pass by Mark Andrews and inefficient clock management.

The Baltimore Ravens had their dreams of leading the AFC North title race ripped away like Isaiah Likely had his go-ahead touchdown taken off the board in a 27-22 loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers on Dec. 7. 

Likely, the Ravens’ tight end appeared to catch a pass from quarterback Lamar Jackson in the end zone that would have put Baltimore up 28-27 with 2:47 remaining. But officials ruled after a replay review that Likely did not possess the ball long enough before Steelers cornerback Joey Porter Jr. wrapped him. As Likely tried to extend the ball away from his own body and away from Porter, the ball jarred loose. 

The result left the Steelers alone at the top of the division with four games remaining. The Ravens still have a chance to even the season series in two weeks at Pittsburgh, but they are currently outside of the AFC playoff picture. 

NFL vice president of instant replay Mark Butterworth said ‘we quickly looked at the play,’ according to the postgame pool report.

‘The receiver controlled the ball in the air, had his right foot down, then his left foot down. The control is the first aspect of the catch. The second aspect is two feet or a body part in bounds, which he did have,’ he said. ‘Then the third step is an act common to the game and before he could get the third foot down, the ball was ripped out. Therefore, it was an incomplete pass.’

Asked to elaborate on ‘an act common to the game,’ Butterworth replied: ‘For this play, it would be him completing the third step.’

That tracked with what Ravens head coach John Harbaugh told reporters.

‘The explanation was that the third foot didn’t get down before the ball came out,’ Harbaugh said. ‘That’s what they said.’

Earlier in the game, in which Steelers quarterback Aaron Rodgers appeared to throw an interception and was ruled as such on the field. But replay ruled that Rodgers had possessed the ball with his knee on the ground amid the commotion following his pass that was batted at the line of scrimmage.

Harbaugh disagreed with the notion Rodgers had a knee down and possession of the football amid the mangle of limbs all trying to corral the pigskin.

‘It’s not an officiating issue. It comes from New York. But when you’re making a catch, you have to survive the ground. He didn’t survive the ground. He’s not down by contact. He was catching the ball on the way down with another person, so you gotta make a catch there and survive the ground,’ Harbaugh said. ‘I don’t know why it was ruled the way it was on that one. All of those things I’m sure they’ll explain it to us, but they had plenty of time to look at it and they’re the ones that are the experts on the rules.’

The Ravens could blame the officials, who turned a Steelers’ field-goal drive into a possession that ended in a touchdown, for saying Travis Jones rushed the long-snapper, which is against the rules, on Chris Boswell’s attempt.

Referee Alex Moore said the snapper is a defenseless player, and contacting him triggers an unnecessary roughness flag. Although Jones contacted a different member of the offensive line first, it appeared, he can still be flagged.

‘You cannot make any forcible contact to that player.,’ Moore said. ‘The calling official felt like the contact rose to the level of being unnecessary against a defenseless player.’

But blaming the stripes wouldn’t be a proper accounting of accountability. 

‘You can’t blame it one way or the other. we know even with those calls, we still should have made enough of a difference to win this game,’ left tackle Ronnie Stanley said.

Three plays after Likely’s non-catch, on a 4th-and-5 from the Pittsburgh 8-yard line, Jackson stepped up and had tight end Mark Andrews open with a step on the defender. The throw was not ideal but catchable, and the freshly paid, favorite target of Jackson could only paw it chaotically with his left hand.

Jackson had another chance to lead a go-ahead touchdown drive with no timeouts and 1:56 left. He got the Ravens to the 30-yard line, but he took a sack on a play that began with nine seconds remaining. Instead of having two shots at the end zone, Jackson lay on the ground as the clock hit zero. 

‘We have to finish and find a way to put some points on the board,’ Jackson told reporters in the locker room. ‘They beat us by five points. We have to find a way to get a touchdown on that last drive.’

Jackson was largely inefficient through the air, going 19-for-35 with 219 passing yards, a touchdown and an interception. 

The Ravens’ defense, for all of its improvement since the beginning of the season, had two free runners for walk-in touchdowns on what ended up being Jaylen Warren’s 38-yard touchdown dash. 

Pittsburgh’s offense is a known commodity by this point in the season. Rodgers, who looked every bit the 42-year-old he turned last week over the past month or so of the season, put up a gaudy stat line – 23-for-34, 287 passing yards with a rushing touchdown and passing score. 

Even with Jackson appearing to be a more willing runner (seven carries, 43 yards), Baltimore could not muster much against a Pittsburgh defense that was embarrassed by the Buffalo Bills in the rushing category a week ago. Derrick Henry (25 rushes, 94 yards) averaged 3.8 yards per carry. 

Rookie kicker Tyler Loop missed a kick. Harbaugh opted for field goals down the stretch at times a fourth-down conversion presented itself as the more analytically sound option. 

The list of reasons why the Ravens lost Sunday is plentiful. They are a game back in the division race because of it and remain alive to make the playoffs if they can retake the division lead and host a playoff game. They can pretend all of this was a blip on the radar. But the reasons why they trail in the division have plagued them all year. 

And that should encourage them to look beyond blaming the refs for their current stock.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

  • This marks the longest active playoff absence among all major men’s sports leagues in North America.
  • The Jets lost 34-10 to the Miami Dolphins after starting quarterback Tyrod Taylor left the game with an injury.

The New York Jets’ new regime now officially finds itself in the same spot where so many of the franchise’s other recent leadership groups have ended up.

With a 34-10 loss to the Miami Dolphins on Sunday, the Jets were officially eliminated from playoff contention, extending their NFL-worst active postseason drought to 15 seasons.

New York broke its tie with the Buffalo Sabres (14 seasons) for the longest ongoing playoff absence among the major men’s sports leagues in North America. The Carolina Panthers and Atlanta Falcons are the next closest NFL teams with seven consecutive years without a postseason appearance.

On Sunday, there was little doubt as to whether the Jets would meet the same fate as they did in previous years. The Dolphins raced out to a 21-0 advantage in the first quarter, when New York also lost starting quarterback Tyrod Taylor to a groin injury. Undrafted rookie Brady Cook took over leading the offense, which would post just 207 total yards on the day.

“I didn’t have them ready to play,’ Jets coach Aaron Glenn said after the game. ‘That was obvious.”

When the Jets hired Glenn in January, the former franchise standout told fans to ‘expect a winning team that you will be proud of.’ Tensions grew after an error-filled 0-7 start, which left New York as the last team in the league to register a victory.

After scoring their first win, the Jets opted to trade two-time All-Pro cornerback Sauce Gardner (to the Indianapolis Colts) and three-time Pro Bowl defensive tackle Quinnen Williams (to the Dallas Cowboys). The moves significantly altered the organization’s outlook for both the near and long term, as they returned three first-round picks over the next two years while stripping the roster of two of its top performers.

‘I want this to be a team that the fans are proud of, but again, I never said they were going to be proud of them right now,’ Glenn said in November after the trades.

The Jets would go on to win two additional games after their Week 9 bye that preceded the trade deadline deals, helping them remain alive longer than five other teams that had already been eliminated entering Sunday. But with the defeat against the Dolphins sealing their fate, New York crept closer to the New Orleans Saints’ mark of 20 seasons for the longest NFL playoff drought in the Super Bowl era.

NFL’s longest active playoff droughts

  • 1. New York Jets – 15 seasons
  • 2t. Atlanta Falcons – 7 seasons
  • 2t. Carolina Panthers – 7 seasons
  • 4t. Chicago Bears – 4 seasons
  • 4t. Indianapolis Colts – 4 seasons
  • 4t. New Orleans Saints – 4 seasons
This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Notre Dame football was controversially left out of the College Football Playoff bracket on Sunday, Dec. 7. In turn, the Fighting Irish’s season is over.

Notre Dame, despite finishing with a 10-2 record, four wins above bowl eligibility, announced it is declining a bowl invitation a few hours after Alabama and Miami took the final two at-large bids over the Fighting Irish.

‘As a team, we’ve decided to withdraw our name from consideration for a bowl game following the 2025 season,’ a statement posted on the team’s social media account read. ‘We appreciate all the support from our families and fans, and we’re hoping to bring the 12th national title to South Bend in 2026.’

Notre Dame finished the season with 10 consecutive wins after starting 0-2 after matchups with Miami and Texas A&M, both of which made the CFP. Ultimately, the Fighting Irish’s head-to-head loss was the deciding factor.

Notre Dame was ranked No. 10 in the final rankings reveal prior to the bracket being set on Tuesday, Dec. 2. The Fighting Irish were No. 9, one spot ahead of Alabama, for multiple weeks before the committee swapped the two teams on Dec. 2.

Miami rose from No. 11 to No. 10 despite not playing in the ACC Championship game. The Hurricanes jumped No. 11 BYU, who lost in the Big 12 Conference Championship to No. 4 Texas Tech, and Notre Dame.

Iowa State and Kansas State declined bowl invites as well and were fined $500,000 by the Big 12. Both Big 12 programs lost their head coaches, though, after Matt Campbell left for Penn State and Chris Klieman retired.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Franz Wagner and the Orlando Magic suffered a 106-100 road loss to the New York Knicks on Sunday, Dec. 7. But the biggest loss for the Magic may have come when Wagner left the game with a lower left leg injury.

The German forward was attempting an alley-oop on a fast break but was fouled by Ariel Hukporti with 4:43 left in the first quarter.

Wagner’s knee appeared to buckle upon landing, and he lay on the court before he was helped off. He was seen limping back to the locker room and did not return to the game.

Franz Wagner injury update

Wagner is expected to undergo an MRI once the team returns to Orlando, according to the team.

‘You never want to see anybody go down, but that hurt my heart, watching him hit the floor,’ Magic coach Jamahl Mosley told reporters after the game. ‘Now I’m just praying that everything is going to be OK with him, but we just don’t like to see that happen to him, especially (Wagner), who does everything the right way at all times he’s on the floor.’

Franz Wagner stats

Wagner has averaged 23.4 points, 6.2 rebounds, 3.8 assists and 1.2 steals in 23 games this season, while shooting .487 from the field and .354 from 3-point range. He leads the team in scoring, field goals made (8.0 per game), field goals attempted (16.4 per game) and minutes (34.5 per game).

He has spent his entire career with Orlando after the Magic selected him with the No. 8 overall pick in the 2021 NBA Draft. He made the All Rookie first team at the end of that season.

In 4-plus seasons in the league, Wagner is averaging 19.4 points, 4.9 rebounds, 3.7 assists and 1.0 steals, while shooting .475 from the field, .324 from 3-point range and .852 from the free throw line.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov’s threats against Ukraine following a drone strike echo a 2022 plot to infiltrate Kyiv and target President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, a former Ukrainian government official has said.

The leader’s latest threat came after a Ukrainian drone reportedly struck a high-rise building near Kadyrov’s home in Grozny on Nov. 5.

The strike prompted the Chechen strongman to vow retaliation in an online video post, according to Reuters.

‘This new threat would just be another assassination threat for Zelenskyy. The Chechens are really serious about revenge,’ a former government official told Fox News Digital.

‘But in Kyiv they are not panicking about this like they were in 2022,’ the former official said under condition of anonymity.

‘Zelenskyy is now better protected, feels more powerful and is less fragile,’ they said.

The recent Ukrainian strike, reported by Reuters, hit the 28-story Grozny-City tower that sits roughly 830 meters from Kadyrov’s home.

Kadyrov, who is loyal to Russia, later allegedly confirmed the attack in a Telegram post, stating there were no casualties, but he condemned the strike as making ‘no tactical sense.’ 

He also warned that retaliation was imminent.

‘Starting tomorrow and in the course of the week, the Ukrainian fascists will be feeling a stern response,’ he threatened.

Unlike Ukraine’s strike, he added, ‘we will not be making a cowardly strike on peaceful targets,’ per Reuters.

Ukrainian attacks have hit sites in Chechnya before now, including a police barracks and a training academy. Chechen units were also deployed during Russia’s 2022 invasion and were among the Kremlin’s most loyal forces.

At the time of the 2022 invasion, the official said there was intense anxiety in Kyiv.

‘At the beginning of the large-scale invasion in 2022, Chechens were sent to Kyiv to murder top politicians,’ the former official said.

‘This included Volodymyr Zelenskyy and top politicians from the government and security services and Parliament, and many other agencies.

‘Zelenskyy and Yermak were very scared,’ they claimed. ‘They were calling from the office, asking some people in the military and security service to secure the metro station in Kyiv.’

The source said one metro station in Kyiv was a potential infiltration route for the Chechens into Zelenskyy’s presidential bunker.

At the time, the station in Kyiv that was deep underground and near the presidential bunker, was viewed as the most vulnerable entry route, the source said.

‘They were afraid that Chechens would get to the bunker through this metro station, but in the end the Chechens were killed before they reached Kyiv.

‘They tried to reach Kyiv, somehow downtown, somehow via the river, but it’s quite a complicated way to get there,’ the former official said.

Meanwhile, with the Nov. 5. Grozny strike landing so close to his home, Kadyrov, already one of Putin’s most aggressive enforcers, is signaling a harsher stance as attacks reach inside Russian territory.

The Moscow Times reported that the drone struck a building that houses regional government offices, including the Chechen Security Council and agencies connected to tourism and religious affairs.

Despite the rhetoric, the former Ukrainian official claimed Zelenskyy is unfazed this time around.

‘These days, Zelenskyy isn’t afraid of Kadyrov’s actions against him or the Ukrainian people. Zelenskyy is feeling very powerful right now,’ they added.

Fox News Digital has reached out to Zelenskyy’s office for comment.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The Kansas City Chiefs (6-6) host the Houston Texans (7-5) to cap off Sunday in Week 14.

It’s a rematch of the AFC divisional round playoff game from last season, which saw the Chiefs earn a 23-14 win. Kansas City has won the previous five meetings with Houston, but things look much more bleak for the reigning AFC champs entering tonight’s game.

If the season ended before Week 14, both the Texans and Chiefs would miss the playoffs. It’s rare territory for Kansas City who has won nine consecutive AFC West titles and has appeared in seven AFC championship games over that span.

Patrick Mahomes is playing at an MVP level, but his supporting cast has been inconsistent, and they have just five games left to qualify for the playoffs.

The visitors are in pursuit of the AFC South title, trailing the Jacksonville Jaguars and the Indianapolis Colts. They were in third entering Sunday and have won four straight, making a surge behind an outstanding defense.

Standout edge rushers Will Anderson Jr. and Danielle Hunter are key players in tonight’s game as the Chiefs’ offensive line has numerous injuries. Left tackle Josh Simmons (IR), right tackle Jawaan Taylor, and guard Trey Smith are not expected to play. Mahomes has been sacked at least three times in five straight and will have his hands full against the NFL’s top-ranked defense.

Houston quarterback C.J. Stroud has struggled at times this season behind his much beleaguered offensive line. Houston’s offense ranks 21st in points per game (21.9).

Despite its struggles, Kansas City has averaged 25.4 points per game (ninth-best in the NFL) and ranks second in offensive EPA per play, per NFL Next Gen Stats.

The Chiefs are in desperation mode, and Houston is playing with a ton of confidence. Both teams are looking to gain momentum in the AFC playoff picture with a win tonight.

USA TODAY Sports will provide updates, analysis and highlights from the Week 14 ‘Sunday Night Football’ matchup below. All times are Eastern.

What TV channel is Sunday Night Football? How to watch Chiefs-Texans

  • TV channel: NBC
  • Live stream: Peacock, NFL+

NBC is the broadcast home of ‘Sunday Night Football.’ Mike Tirico will be on the call alongside Cris Collinsworth. Melissa Stark will provide updates from the sidelines.

Watch ‘Sunday Night Football’ with Peacock

What time is the Chiefs vs. Texans game?

  • Start time: 8:20 p.m. ET | 6:20 p.m. MT

The ‘SNF’ matchup between the Chiefs and Texans will get underway at 8:20 p.m. ET, the customary start time for ‘SNF.’

Chiefs-Texans live stream

  • Live stream:Peacock, NFL+

Peacock, NBC’s proprietary streaming service, will broadcast ‘SNF.’

Watch ‘Sunday Night Football’ with Peacock

Chiefs vs. Texans picks, predictions

Here’s how the expert panel at USA TODAY Sports sees this game shaking out:

  • Jarrett Bell: Texans, 24-23
  • Nick Brinkerhoff: Texans, 27-23
  • Chris Bumbaca: Chiefs, 22-19
  • Nate Davis: Texans, 23-20
  • Tyler Dragon: Chiefs, 25-20
  • Mike Middlehurst-Schwartz: Chiefs, 24-23

Chiefs vs. Texans odds, moneyline, O/U

Provided by BetMGM Sportsbook; access USA TODAY Sports Scores and Sports Betting Odds hub for a full list.

  • Moneyline (ML): Kansas City -185 (Bet $185 to win $100) | Houston +154 (Bet $100 to win $154)
  • Against the spread (ATS): Kansas City -3.5 (-110) | Houston +3.5 (-110)
  • Over/Under (O/U): 41.5 (O: -110 | U: -110)

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What time is the Chiefs game today?

The Chiefs vs. Texans game will kick off at 8:20 p.m. ET on Sunday, Dec. 7. Kansas City will host the game at Arrowhead Stadium as both teams look to improve their position in the AFC playoff picture.

AFC West standings

The Chiefs enter ‘Sunday Night Football’ third in the AFC West.

  • Denver Broncos (10-2)
  • Los Angeles Chargers (8-4)
  • Kansas City Chiefs (6-6)
  • Las Vegas Raiders (2-10)

Chiefs schedule 2025

Chiefs vs. Texans injury report

Texans schedule 2025

AFC South standings

The Texans enter tonight’s game in third place in the AFC South:

  1. Jacksonville Jaguars (9-4)
  2. Indianapolis Colts (8-5)
  3. Houston Texans (7-5)
  4. Tennessee Titans (2-11)
This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Then, his contributions and the Browns’ comeback bid came to an abrupt end.

After Sanders closed the Titans’ lead to 31-29 on his third touchdown pass of the day with 1:03 remaining, Browns coach Kevin Stefanski opted to take the rookie quarterback off the field for the potentially game-tying two-point conversion. Instead, rookie running back Quinshon Judkins took the snap in a Wildcat package and bobbled the ball right when it appeared as though a pitch would materialize. Judkins backtracked and tried to fire a pass to the opposite side of the field, but his attempt was broken up by a defender and fell incomplete, all but securing Tennessee’s second win of the season.

Afterward, Stefanski offered scant details on the strategy behind the call or the decision to take Sanders off the field, but said he deserved blame for the outcome rather than offensive coordinator and play-caller Tommy Rees.

‘Not gonna get into all the specifics, but obviously did not go as we thought it would,’ said Stefanski, later adding, ‘I’m responsible for all of it.’

Sanders, who finished with four total touchdowns (three rushing, one passing) and 364 yards on 23-of-42 passing, largely shrugged off being removed from the game.

‘If I’m out there any play, I wish I would always have the ball in my hand, but that’s not what football is,’ Sanders said. ‘Sometimes you got to run the ball, sometimes you got to kick a field goal. … I know we practiced something and executed in practice, and we just didn’t seem to execute it today. So I would never go against what the call was or anything.’

Sanders’ outing was not without error, as he threw an ill-advised interception late in the third quarter that led to the Titans’ go-ahead touchdown. But Stefanski, who last week wouldn’t commit to Sanders starting beyond the game against the Titans, saw plenty of promising highs from the fifth-round draft pick.

‘He fought throughout the game, which we knew he would,’ Stefanski said. ‘Obviously with any young player, there’s going to be ups and downs, and I though there were some really, really, really good moments. He’ll keep learning from some of the plays he wants back, but (there were) some really good moments.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

STORRS, CT — Sue Bird remembers her first unofficial visit to UConn.

The now basketball Hall of Famer came with her coaches from Christ the King High School in Middle Village, New York.

‘We saw a game and Gampel Pavilion was filled, everybody going nuts, and I was like, ‘Well, this is kind of cool,” said Bird, who made her return to Storrs to have her number retired on Sunday, Dec. 7.

‘And I remember thinking to myself, which is just so kind of silly … ‘Well, if I went here, I could probably go home on weekends to do my laundry, so that’s a plus.”

Bird, who won two national titles at UConn, remains the school record holder in 3-point field goal percentage (45.9) and free throw percentage (89.2). She is the third women’s player to have her jersey number retired at UConn joining Rebecca Lobo (50) and Swin Cash (32).

When asked how many many schools she got offers from back then, Bird joked: ‘A lot. Like, a lot. Like all of them.’ All but Tennessee, which had just signed its point guards of the future. She said she quickly narrowed the list to five, Duke, Notre Dame, Stanford, UConn and Vanderbilt, and took official visits to the latter three.

She remembers sitting in UConn coach Geno Auriemma’s office on that visit and being a little overwhelmed.

‘He is extremely confident, charismatic, he can be intimidating, especially for a teenager,’ Bird said. ‘I just remember sitting in his office, listening to him talk about who knows what, and I was just … Like, what’s going on right now? And then you fast forward, and you get to the whole process.’

Auriemma honored Bird on Sunday calling her: ‘Maybe, wait, no maybe, she is the greatest point guard to play basketball, man or woman.’

Bird had a nothing but praise for her alma mater, which is currently ranked No. 1 and won its 11th national championship against South Carolina last spring.

‘There’s something really wonderful about, not just what they built, in terms of the winning, but it’s why you’re doing it,’ Bird said. ‘They’ve really built something where, when players come here, it’s because something is speaking to them, something’s connecting for them.

‘For me, it was being at a place where I knew I was going to get challenged.’

Bird averaged 11.7 points and 4.9 assists in 118 games for the Huskies. She won the 2002 National Player of the Year and was the first UConn player to be drafted No. 1 overall in the WNBA draft. Bird won four WNBA championships with the Seattle Storm (2004, 2010, 2018, 2020). She also captured five Olympic gold medals (2004, 2008, 2012, 2016, and 2020) and four FIBA World Cups (2002, 2010, 2014, 2018).

Bird has spent most of 2025 being honored. First, she was inducted into the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame in June. Then, the Storm unveiled a statue of Bird in front of Climate Pledge Arena in Seattle in August. Finally, she was inducted into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame in September. 

‘What’s been great about this year, is it’s been in this excuse to get all my family, all my friends, all my former teammates, former coaches, you name it, anyone who has touched my life in any way, shape or form, it’s been bringing them together,’ Bird said. ‘… To get to share it, I already mentioned, like, reminiscing, that’s really what all of these moments have represented.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

So much drama, so few answers to a college football postseason that, now more than ever, is a raging dumpster fire. 

This much we know about the annual beauty pageant of a demolition derby: Everyone knows the surest, safest way to get to Valhalla is to win every single game.  

Lose, and you’re at the contradictions and consternation of the College Football Playoff selection committee, and the human condition that fuels it.

And by human condition, I mean that absolute absurdity of it all. 

If strength of schedule was raised this offseason to the top of the metrics for the 12-member committee, how does James Madison — with the 128th-ranked schedule and without a win over a Power conference team — earn one of the five precious automatic qualifying spots for conference champions?

If winning a conference championship game is a critical metric, why wouldn’t losing a conference championship game be the same?

Indiana won the Big Ten Championship game, and earned the No. 1 seed. Texas Tech won the Big 12, and Georgia won the SEC, and both earned a first-round bye. 

But Duke won the ACC, had a significantly tougher schedule and better wins than JMU, yet JMU earned the final automatic bid for the top five conference champions because it coasted through the Sun Belt and Duke lost five games in the ACC.

Ohio State lost to Indiana in the Big Ten Championship game, and fell. 

BYU was routed by Texas Tech in the Big 12 Championship game, and fell.

Alabama was routed by Georgia in the SEC Championship game, and didn’t move — and stayed in the CFP as the only (and first) three-loss team.

I ask you, who in their right mind believes Alabama, which lost to Oklahoma at home three weeks ago, nearly lost Auburn, and got blown out by Georgia, should be part of the party?

Meanwhile, there is Texas, which has three wins over the CFP Top 14, penalized for playing a nonconference game at No. 2 Ohio State — and losing by seven points.

Then there’s the curious case of Notre Dame, the epicenter of the contradictory absurdity of the selection committee. 

For a month the 12-member committee explained Notre Dame wasn’t the same team that lost to Miami in the season opener and deserved to be among the fortunate 12. The Irish, they say, were playing as well as anyone in the country. 

Until Championship Week arrived and Notre Dame wasn’t playing, and somehow fell out. How, you ask? We don’t really know, so maybe committee chairman and Arkansas athletic director Hunter Yurachek can help. 

Or maybe he can’t. 

This is why no one trusts the selection committee. What in blue blazes does BYU have to do with the Notre Dame-Miami argument? 

Because, Yurachek tried to awkwardly explain, the committee never really looked at Notre Dame and Miami — and Miami’s head-to-head win over Notre Dame was never considered — until the two teams were right next to each other in the poll. And BYU’s big loss to Texas Tech made that happen.

Really, he said that. 

Look, the process has to change. The idea college football can have a playoff to determine a national champion and 10 teams are evaluated one way, and two teams (Tulane and JMU) are evaluated a completely different way, is the craziest looney of all.

That the CFP can sell Ole Miss playing host to Tulane — a game we saw in September, where Tulane lost by 35 — and JMU playing at Oregon as part of four elite games to begin the postseason, isn’t realistic or productive for the health of the sport.

One Group of Five team is fine. Not preferable, but doable. 

A second at the expense of a Power conference champion or a more deserving team, is absolutely mind-numbing. This isn’t the NCAA men’s basketball tournament, where a mid-major can shock a Power conference team because one player gets hot and scores 30. 

There’s no comparison, and the fanciful pollyanna idea of anyone selling it is ridiculous.

There will be tweaks to the format this offseason, with or without the move to 16 teams. It should start with a limit on Group of Five teams, and a minimum threshold to earn a spot.

No more gifts, no more automatic qualifications. The gift is reaching the threshold to be considered.

Not rolling into the sport’s marquee event as a raging dumpster fire.

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